Deals ramp up in Asia’s healthcare space with cancer focus

An acquisition in Hong Kong by the Frontier Group, an IPO by Sunho Biologics on the HKEX and a $1.5 billion investment into Singapore by AstraZeneca are signs that investments in the cancer treatment market are ramping up in the region.

There has been a flurry of recent deals and developments in Asia’s cancer treatment over the last few weeks.

This includes a $1.5 billion investment from UK-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca in Singapore, a listing on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) by a Chinese biopharmaceutical firm and an acquisition in Hong Kong by the New Frontier Group of the Hong Kong Integrated Oncology Center, a leading comprehensive private oncology medical platform. 

The investment by AstraZeneca was done in association with Singapore’s Economic Development Board, which works under Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry, showing that governments are also spotting the investment opportunity in this area.

Listing on the HKEX on May 24 was Sunho Biologics (China), which is focused on the development and commercialisation of biologics for the treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases. The firm saw its shares, which had a final offer price of HK$13.5, climb 10% on the listing day and is also part of a wider trend of more companies looking to raise money via an initial public offering (IPO) on the HKSE as the city’s market looks to bounce-back from some extremely difficult times.

The Nanjing City-based firm, founded in 2018, offered 34.1518 million shares globally, with the Hong Kong public offering accounting for 10%; it was 10 times oversubscribed. CICC was the sole sponsor, sole overall goordinator, sole global coordinator, joint bookrunner and joint lead manager on the deal. International law firm O’Melveny acted on the deal led by partners Ke Geng and Ke Zhu. It was O’Melveny’s seventeenth Hong Kong IPO completed for Chapter 18A biotech companies. 

The offering size was approximately HK$460 million (approximately $60 million).

Garri Zmudze, general partner at venture capital firm LongeVC, told FinanceAsia: “Asia is a growing opportunity for life science businesses and investors alike, because the region presents a unique set of circumstances for growth."

Zmudze added: "The region’s potential is reflected in a flurry of deals in the cancer space in recent weeks.”

Next-generation cancer treatment

Cancer drugs have been developing quickly in recent years.

SunHo Biologics uses its understanding of immunology to develop immunotherapies including immunocytokines to treat cancers and autoimmune diseases. It has three products it has developed in-house, and is the middle of several trials including Phase II of clinical trials for biliary tract carcinoma  and colorectal cancer.

AstraZeneca is building a manufacturing facility in Singapore for antibody drug conjugates (ADCs), to help enhance the global supply of its ADC portfolio. The manufacturing facility is set to be ready in 2029.

ADCs are next-generation treatments that deliver cancer-killing agents directly to cancer cells through a targeted antibody. The manufacturing of ADCs includes: antibody production; the synthesis of chemotherapy drug and linker; the conjugation of drug-linker to the antibody; and the filling of the completed ADC substance. 

Sadly one of the reasons so many investors are looking toward Asia Pacific is that there has been an overall increase in the number of cancer incidences.

According to the World Health Organisation over 35 million new cancer cases are predicted in 2050, an increase from the estimated 20 million in 2022. Lung cancer was the most commonly occurring cancer worldwide with 2.5 million new cases accounting for 12.4% of the total new cases.

Lung cancer’s re-emergence as the most common cancer is likely related to persistent tobacco use in Asia.

GBA

One of the regions that cancer investments is set to grow in is the Greater Bay Area (GBA).

Healthcare group New Frontier Group recently bought the Hong Kong Integrated Oncology Center (HKIOC). The HKIOC provies cancer treatment services, early diagnosis, radiotherapy, systemic treatments, mental health and other rehabilitation services.

New Frontier sees a “sizeable and growing patient population in the Greater Bay Area” and it already owns the HEAL Medical Group, the Guangzhou United Familty Hospital and the New Frontier Shenzhen United Family Hospital. Collectively they are known as the New Frontier Greater Bay Area Healthcare.

In May, Hong Kong hosted the Asia Summit on Global Health where Hong Kong chief executive John Lee explained that life and health technology will be part of the Hong Kong-Shenzhen I&T Park, part of the Shenzhenh-Hong Kong Science and Technology Innovation Co-operation Zone.

Lee said: “The Hong Kong SAR Government is also enhancing I&T support across the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors to fuel life and health science advances. The 16 life and health-related R&D (research and development) centres established in our InnoHK research clusters are yielding impressive research outcomes.”

He added the government has earmarked another $1.3 billion to further support life and health technology and welcomed global talent to Hong Kong to participate in the sector.  

Other investors  on the hunt

Private equity firms Carlyle and EQT have recently closed large funds in Asia which, among other sectors, are targeting healthcare firms in Asia, with Carlyle specifically targeting firms in Japan after closing its latest record buyout fund in the country.

There are also a number of specialist smaller investors in the sector based in Asia, or others looking to tap the market, including the likes of Pureos BioVentures, while LongeVC is looking at the wider “longevity” market and is backing “visionary biotech” in the US and markets such as Japan. 

Expect plenty more investment in this space, which will hopefully to lead to many lives being saved. 

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